Summer 2013 - UCSF Medical Center
Transcription
Summer 2013 - UCSF Medical Center
Orthopaedic Surgery news Advantages of direct anterior approach to total hip replacement The growing preference for less invasive surgeries has renewed interest in the direct anterior approach (DAA) to hip arthroplasty. Erik Hansen, MD, of the UCSF Orthopaedic Institute, believes the combination of technical advances in surgical instrumentation and proper training has allowed the technique to be performed more reproducibly, thus allowing it to realize its theoretical benefits: n n As the only intermuscular, internervous approach to the hip, the DAA can minimize soft-tissue injury and anatomic disruption. This can facilitate faster return to function while achieving comparable outcomes to other surgical approaches at the six-month to one-year mark. Because the patient is in the supine position, the DAA can facilitate anesthesia monitoring, as well as a more accurate assessment of leg length equality. Furthermore, it allows intraoperative use of fluoroscopic X-rays to provide real-time feedback to confirm implant position and sizing. CONTINUED ON PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO s u m m e r /f a l l 2 0 13 V O L U M E 12 N U M B E R 1 CONTENTS Message from the chair 2 Bringing exemplary orthopaedic care to the East Bay 4 Investigating innovative ways to restore the lives of orthopaedic cancer patients5 Advances enable increase in outpatient spine procedures 6 Optimizing bone health across the life span7 CME courses8 Message from the chair I In the era of health care reform, it is more important than ever that clinicians at leading institutions implement evidence-based improvements in care and prevention that restore patients’ lives and ease the financial burden on our entire health care system. This issue of Orthopaedic Surgery News offers examples of how the UCSF Department of Orthopaedic Surgery is making its contribution. Thomas Parker Vail, MD In our cover story, surgeon Erik Hansen, MD, discusses two important developments in arthroplasty procedures. First he outlines the risks and advantages of the anterior approach to hip replacement; then he describes the efforts of a consortium we have joined to reduce the risk of periprosthetic infection. Other stories describe improvements we are implementing – some of which we’ve pioneered here – in orthopaedic oncology, outpatient spine surgeries and preventive and ongoing care for osteoporosis and other skeletal insufficiencies. Patients benefit in a number of ways: avoidance of later or more complex health challenges, faster recovery times and retention of limbs they might have lost in an earlier era. A final story chronicles our growing collaboration with Children’s Hospital & Research Center Oakland, where the combination of two historically renowned facilities and staffs is improving and extending care to more children than ever before throughout the Bay Area. That brings me to an essential point: Such improvements occur most often through collaboration among caring and dedicated professionals. As always, we are proud to join all of you in these ongoing efforts. © Thomas Parker Vail, MD Professor and Chair Department of Orthopaedic Surgery 2 Advantages of direct anterior approach to total hip replacement CONTINUED FROM FRONT COVER Training Matters “The replacement procedure itself is the same regardless of surgical approach,” says Hansen, who received special training in the DAA at one of the few places in the country to offer it: the Rothman Institute at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia. “But a growing respect for the soft-tissue envelope around the hip and its importance in a patient’s recovery and outcomes has made the DAA my approach of choice.” Erik Hansen, MD Nevertheless, he cautions that for those who have been trained only in the more traditional lateral and posterior approaches, the DAA presents unique challenges and complications. n For more traditionally trained surgeons, conceptualizing the anatomy from a new angle can make proper implant placement a challenge. n Lack of familiarity with the more fragile skin associated with the DAA can compromise incisional integrity and lead to a higher rate of wound complications. Above: Drawing the anterior incision Left: Final placement of the stem n Lack of experience with the technique can place patients at a higher risk of lateral femoral cutaneous nerve injury, which results in anterolateral thigh numbness. Finally, patient selection is an important consideration, and an honest discussion between patient and surgeon is important to determine if this surgical approach makes the most sense for a given individual. “But in the hands of a surgeon trained in the technique, the direct anterior approach works quite well for many patients,” says Hansen. © Dr. Erik Hansen can be contacted at (415) 353-2808. FIGHTING PERIPROSTHETIC INFECTION Given projected increases in joint replacements and revisions, the prevalence of more resistant bacterial organisms and a more acutely ill patient population, experts predict a significant rise in the number of periprosthetic infections. To better prevent, diagnose and treat these infections, UCSF is part of a multicenter initiative along with several other high-volume arthroplasty centers across the country. The group is establishing a database of periprosthetic infections, seeking to answer a number of key questions. Diagnosis is challenging as no single test is 100 percent accurate and many chronic infections are due to organisms difficult to detect using traditional methods. Refining established biochemical and hematological markers could make the tests more accurate. For prevention, the group is attempting to better characterize risk factors and to target preventive efforts on not only the patient, but also the organism and implant. For treatment, they are testing therapies and surgical techniques that may avert the need to remove the implant and keep patients immobile for extended periods. The ideal would be to treat the infection in one sitting, thus minimizing morbidity associated with current treatment strategies. In addition, they are collaborating with infectious disease specialists regarding modified antibiotic regimens to improve the success rate of infection control. “The mechanical questions regarding joint replacement have more or less been answered, so preventing and treating periprosthetic infection is the next big challenge,” says surgeon Erik Hansen, MD, of the UCSF Orthopaedic Institute. Collaborating to bring exemplary orthopaedic care to the East Bay S Since June 2012, the UCSF Department of Orthopaedic Surgery has collaborated with Children’s Hospital & Research Center Oakland to provide comprehensive orthopaedic services to the children of the East Bay. Expanding to Meet the Diverse Needs of a Diverse Population The collaboration extends to Walnut Creek, where Children’s Hospital Oakland has an ambulatory clinic and surgery center, and exemplifies the UCSF department’s efforts to create specialty collaborations for pediatric orthopaedics throughout the Bay Area. Today, in addition to its clinics at UCSF Medical Center and Children’s Hospital Oakland, the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery has satellite clinics in Greenbrae (Marin County), Santa Rosa and San Ramon. “It’s a wonderful opportunity for our department to play an ever more significant role in the health of children and their families throughout the Bay Area,” says UC San Francisco’s Coleen Sabatini, MD, who also serves as the medical director of orthopaedics and interim chief And as the collaboration between the two renowned of orthopaedic surgery at Children’s institutions matures, Sabatini is optimistic that the partHospital Oakland. “We believe the comnership will lead to centers of excellence for addressing bination of the two entities strengthens more unmet pediatric orthopaedic needs in the East Bay. the work we do and enables us to take Coleen Sabatini, MD “We are actively recruiting additional surgeons to further even better care of more children.” expand our clinical programs, and hope to deepen our From Traumatic Injuries to Elective Procedures focus on prevention programs like playground and sports injury prevention,” she says. At Children’s Hospital Oakland, the UCSF orthopaedic surgeons – assisted by an experienced team of nurses, orthopaedic techs, physician and medical assistants and office staff – provide all orthopaedic on-call and clinic coverage, which includes treatment for acute traumatic injuries as well as elective surgeries. Specifically, the range of pediatric services includes: 4 n Full-spectrum orthopaedic care by Sabatini and Nirav Pandya, MD n Comprehensive pediatric and adolescent sports medicine n Orthopaedic oncology care n Congenital hand and complex elbow reconstruction n Trauma care that surgeons at Children’s Hospital Oakland provide, with UCSF orthopaedic traumatologists from San Francisco General Hospital available to assist in Oakland with definitive care for “adolescents who suffer more adult-type injuries, such as acetabular/pelvic fractures and pilon fractures,” says Sabatini n Treatment for complex conditions and deformities of the hip, spine, and lower leg and foot Sabatini is enthusiastic about the opportunity to serve the patients at Children’s Hospital Oakland. “It’s an honor to be part of this mission,” she says. © Dr. Coleen Sabatini can be contacted at (415) 353-2967 or at Children’s Hospital Oakland at (510) 428-3238. Investigating innovative ways to restore the lives of orthopaedic cancer patients O Orthopaedic oncologist Rosanna Wustrack, MD, of UCSF Medical Center believes the tools and knowledge are emerging to do more than save the lives of patients with bone cancer or soft-tissue sarcoma. Orthopaedic oncologists are beginning to understand how to restore the quality of these people’s lives and dramatically reduce the haunting specter of long-term complications. Rosanna Wustrack, MD Wustrack – who trained with Richard O’Donnell, MD, chief of Orthopaedic Oncology at UCSF Medical Center – spent the past year completing a fellowship at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Old Bone New Bone In addition to continuing to practice stateof-the-art surgical techniques, she says, “I’ve been working to identify the long-term problems with limb salvage surgery and large endoprostheses, the frequency with which they occur – and then to think of new ways to prevent and treat these problems.” frequently, both in her fellowship and in her years at UCSF with O’Donnell – who may have done more of these procedures than any practicing surgeon in the world. Salvaging Joints, Preventing Infection Wustrack is also working with other devices and techniques to improve her patients’ lives, including allograft-prosthesis composites, biologic reconstructions and joint salvage surgeries. “With joint salvage, for example, you might have a tumor in the lower part of the femur, where you’d take out the entire bone to complete a big knee replacement,” she says. “Now we’re trying different things to save the joint when possible – and not just the limb.” Wustrack is also seeking ways to prevent infection, which for limb salvage surgery can affect up to 10 percent of patients over their lifetime. Follow-up, she says, is critical. “It is important to follow these patients yearly and track them for long-term skeleOne long-term concern with most limb tal effects from their cancer treatments,” salvage devices is aseptic loosening. Over she says. “We know, for example, that if time, tiny particles from the implants someone gets cancer treatments during break loose and create a biochemical adolescence, they have a higher risk of reaction that causes the bone around the low bone mineral density as an adult, so implant to erode. we need to make sure they get adequate “This means patients have to undergo a calcium and vitamin D early, are screened second or third surgery to revise the device early for osteoporosis and are educated and, sometimes, require an amputation,” about fracture prevention.” © says Wustrack. Avoiding Aseptic Loosening Compressive osseointegration encourages bone growth and long-term stability. She says that the use of compressive osseointegration – a technique in which a spring-loaded implant applies hundreds of pounds of pressure at the boneprosthesis interface to promote osseointegration and stabilization of the implant – can reduce the risk of aseptic loosening when compared with more traditional limb salvage devices. Wustrack used the device Dr. Rosanna Wustrack can be contacted at (415) 885-3800. 5 Advances enable increase in outpatient spine procedures B By leveraging surgical and technological advances and a collaboration with pain management experts, surgeons from the UCSF Department of Orthopaedic Surgery have dramatically increased the number of minimally invasive spine surgeries they do in the outpatient setting. Completed at the UCSF Orthopaedic Institute at Mission Bay, the outpatient procedures include: n Cervical endoscopic laminotomies and foraminotomies n Lumbar discectomies n Minimally invasive lumbar decompressions Top: OR nurse Connie Ulep gets ready to prepare the back of a patient’s neck for surgery. Typical surgeries last one or two hours, with an additional hour of recovery time. Above: A video camera is placed on the surgical site, and what it captures is displayed on the monitor positioned over the patient. A Boon for Patients “Patients love it,” says orthopaedic surgeon Bobby Tay, MD. “One major advantage is that there is a more focused, dedicated team, including nurses and anesthesiologists with deep experience in outpatient procedures. Anesthetics are more consistently geared towards induction and wake-up, as well as toward prevention of nausea.” Left: Dr. Tay performs surgery while looking at the monitor for anatomical orientation. Assisting him is Michael Dimailig, surgical technician. He says that the shifting of single-level surgeries to the outpatient setting is made possible by a number of factors: n More refined surgical techniques n Better equipment n Better visualization n Advances in pain management Improving Perioperative Pain Management The pain management improvements are especially important, because the ability to discharge people is often related to their level of postoperative pain. Bobby Tay, MD 6 “We use synergistic local anesthetics intraoperatively, which lengthens the duration of postoperative analgesia,” says Tay. The result is an extension of the postoperative analgesic effect from what was previously three hours to almost an entire day. This is not just a matter of comfort, as studies have shown improved pain management can also improve wound healing. In the future, these types of advances could even enable same-day procedures for more complicated surgeries like fusions or disc replacements. The contribution of this type of interdisciplinary thinking has been crucial. “Having all these great minds together is a distinct advantage,” says Tay. “It’s one of the added benefits of being at UCSF.” © Dr. Bobby Tay can be contacted at (415) 353-2840. Optimizing bone health across the life span M Most physicians know well the devastating effects of a fracture on older adults. “In patients who have had a hip fracture, more than half never get back to their prior level of function, 20 percent are permanently placed in nursing homes and about 25 percent die within a year of their injury,” says Aenor Sawyer, MD, of the UCSF Department of Orthopaedic Surgery. After an initial hip fracture, surviving patients are up to five times more likely to have another fracture. It’s less commonly understood that many skeletal health problems are preventable if physicians are more attentive to maintaining patients’ bone health across their life spans. This is the thinking behind the new Skeletal Health Clinic at the UCSF Orthopaedic Institute at Mission Bay. There a multidisciplinary team (clinicians from orthopaedics, endocrinology, nephrology, rheumatology, physical therapy, nutrition, radiology and pharmacology) provides one-stop shopping for preventing, diagnosing, Aenor Sawyer, MD treating and educating patients about skeletal health concerns. The clinic deploys some of the most sophisticated boneimaging techniques in the world – including dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) – as well as premier lab and bone biopsy capabilities and innovative devices for safe postsurgical mobilization. It also includes a telemedicine component, where experts conduct multidisciplinary Web-based conferences for complex cases. Comprehensive Evaluation Facilitates Precision Medicine “Low bone mass and skeletal insufficiency that can lead to osteoporosis is grossly underdiagnosed and undertreated,” says Sawyer. Typically, the first opportunity to address these concerns comes when any patient, including a child, presents with a fracture. Sawyer and her team will assess the full array of risk factors, from genetics, medications and underlying disease states to diet and activity patterns. As needed, bone density, laboratory and genetic diagnostics are conducted. CONTINUED ON PAGE 8 Aenor Sawyer, MD, explains the concept of skeletal health across the life span. REFER FOR A BONE HEALTH ASSESSMENT IN THE FOLLOWING SITUATIONS: Children who: n Have had multiple fractures (>2) n Fracture from low-level injuries or activities n Have systemic chronic illness Adults who: n Are 50+ years of age and have had a recent fracture n Have had three or more nondigital fractures n Have a family history of osteoporosis or multiple fractures n Have lost 2 inches from their tallest recalled height n Are postmenopausal n Have chronic inflammatory diseases or cancer n Use corticosteroids n Report falling UCSF Medical Center 505 Parnassus Ave., San Francisco, CA 94143-0940 REFERRAL LIAISON SERVICE PH YSI CI A N L I A I S O N Tel: SER(800) VI CE444-2559 Fax: (415) 353-4395 Tel: (800) 444-2559 www.ucsfhealth.org Fax: (415) 353-4395 www.ucsfhealth.org Our Referral Liaison Service provides you with improved access to our Our Physician Liaison Service physicians and medical services. provides you with improved Liaisons can expedite the referral access to our physicians and process, assist in obtaining medical services. Liaisons can follow-up information and are expedite the referral process available to help resolve difficulties. and assist in obtaining follow-up information, and are available to help resolve difficulties. Orthopaedic Surgery news Nonprofit Org. US Postage PAID San Francisco, CA Permit No. 8285 Return Service Requested TRANS F ER CEN T E R Tel: (415) 353-9166 Fax: (415) 353-9172 The UCSF Transfer Center is staffed 24/7 by a specialized team that evaluates the clinical needs of your patient to ensure that the most appropriate medical care is provided and to coordinate transfer and transport from hospitals throughout the region. At discharge, the Transfer Center can facilitate the return transfer. Mark R. Laret, Chief Executive Officer, UCSF Medical Center Orthopaedic Surgery News is published annually for referring physicians by the Marketing Department of UCSF Medical Center. It is written by Andrew Schwartz and designed by Robin Awes Everett. Photos: SPL/Science Source, p. 1; Eraxion, p. 2; Fuse, p. 4; Lori Justice, p. 5; Purificacion Smith, p. 6; Elisabeth Fall, p. 7; Brooke Duthie, p. 7. To read back issues of this and other physician newsletters, visit http://www.ucsfhealth.org/newsletters This publication is printed on 55% recycled paper containing 30% post-consumer waste fibers. Volume 12, Number 1, Summer/Fall 2013. © 2013 The Regents of the University of California CME Courses For more information, visit www.cme.ucsf.edu Third Annual UCSF Techniques in Complex Spine Surgery Program November 8-9, 2013 Henderson, Nev. Optimizing bone health across the life span CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7 If they find a problem, treatment typically begins with lifestyle modifications, such as nutritional changes, safe activity interventions and fall-risk assessments that reduce the risk to fragile bones. “Then we determine whether pharmacologic interventions are needed and which type,” says Sawyer. “This is precision medicine because skeletal insufficiency is multifactorial and treatment approaches need to be individualized.” This is because 90 percent of bone mass acquisition occurs by a person’s early adulthood. Sawyer says there are many things that can be done to optimize this process so people can “bank some bone” for later in life. “Bones are incredibly dynamic,” she explains. “They grow and remodel according to the stresses placed upon them. One thing we try to do is teach people how to load their bones in a way that best meets their needs – and [how to] maintain adequate nutrition Childhood a Window of Opportunity to optimize this process. We treat every Sawyer stresses that paying attention to patient visit, every fracture, as an opporthe entire life span is essential, citing an tunity to teach the patient that it is never increase in fractures across all age ranges. too early or too late to improve their bone That’s why, she adds, “We consider health and prevent the next fracture.” © childhood a key window of opportunity.” Dr. Aenor Sawyer can be contacted at (415) 514-1519.